Mind Strength – A Funny Mike Leach Leadership Lesson
Jul 06, 2026
I've heard a funny Coach Leach story from Connor Halliday about the 2012 season when Washington State played Oregon at CenturyLink Field in Seattle.
Leach kept coming over to Halliday between series to coach him up on our play called 6—a four vertical concept where everyone was running deep. Halliday was sitting on the bike, and every few minutes Leach would come back with the same coaching point.
Finally, Halliday had enough.
"I've f***ing got it!"
Without missing a beat, Leach responded:
"Hey... Hey, Halliday. Look around this stadium. There are 66,000 people here. If you ever talk to me that way again, there will be 66,001. And guess who'll be that one? It'll be you."
Haha, I didn't hear it myself, but I can certainly picture it.
It's also something to be learned from.
A mistake leaders often make is waiting too long to address behavior that falls below the standard.
Leach didn't wait until Monday's team meeting. He didn't pull Halliday aside after practice. He corrected it immediately.
When someone crosses a line—whether it's how they speak to a coach, a teammate, or anyone else—the longer it's ignored, the more acceptable it becomes.
Correction isn't about embarrassing someone. It's about protecting the standard.
Great leaders don't avoid uncomfortable conversations. They address them early, clearly, and then move on.
Culture is built by what leaders tolerate.
Protect the culture.
Easy Easy,
-Luke Falk